The Oxnard field is within the Ventura Basin Province of southern California. Geologically, this area is part of a structural
downwarp that occurred during the late
Pliocene. Rocks within the region are all
sedimentary and mostly marine. Oil accumulations, of which there are many in the Ventura province, mainly occur in
anticlinal settings modified by faulting;
stratigraphy is also influential in creating traps for hydrocarbons. Where the sedimentary rocks are sandstones with high porosity, and the structure and stratigraphy allow hydrocarbons to be trapped on their upward migration, oilfields are found. As the oil field is in the center of a large flat
alluvial floodplain, there is no surface expression of any anticlinal structure capable of holding oil. Under the surface
alluvium, a series of relatively impermeable sedimentary units cap the petroleum-bearing formation. On top are the
Pleistocene San Pedro and Pleistocene-upper
Pliocene Santa Barbara formations; under that the
Pico Sands, of Pliocene age, which contain areas of
tar sands; under that, separated by an unconformity, the
Monterey Formation, of
Miocene age, which also contains tar sands (the Vaca Tar Sand); under that, again separated by an unconformity, the relatively impermeable
Conejo-Topanga Formation, which caps the faulted anticlinal structure containing medium-grade oil about below ground surface. This producing horizon is named the "McInnes" pool, and is in the
Oligocene-age
Sespe Formation. The Oxnard field contains a large quantity of
tar sand, a type of
bitumen which is categorized as an
unconventional oil deposit. The average depth below ground surface of the tar sands – both the Vaca Sand, and the Pico Sand – is about , and their thickness ranges from 0 to , representing a total volume of , equivalent to approximately of oil for both units, were it possible to recover their petroleum content. The quality of the oil from the lower pools is good and the gravity medium, at 24 to 38
API, while the oil from the tar sand is extremely heavy and of poor quality, with an extraordinarily high sulfur content – API gravity of 5-7, viscosity of 28,000 to 33,000
centipoise, and sulfur content of between 5 and 7.5 percent by weight. ==History, production and operations==